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Corrupted coordination of epigenetic modifications leads to diverging chromatin states and transcriptional heterogeneity in CLL

Author

Listed:
  • Alessandro Pastore

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Federico Gaiti

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Sydney X. Lu

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Ryan M. Brand

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Scott Kulm

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Ronan Chaligne

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Hongcang Gu

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard)

  • Kevin Y. Huang

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Elena K. Stamenova

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard)

  • Wendy Béguelin

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Yanwen Jiang

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Rafael C. Schulman

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Kyu-Tae Kim

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Alicia Alonso

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • John N. Allan

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Richard R. Furman

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Andreas Gnirke

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard)

  • Catherine J. Wu

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)

  • Ari M. Melnick

    (Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Alexander Meissner

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
    Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics)

  • Bradley E. Bernstein

    (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
    Massachusetts General Hospital)

  • Omar Abdel-Wahab

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
    Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Dan A. Landau

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

Abstract

Cancer evolution is fueled by epigenetic as well as genetic diversity. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), intra-tumoral DNA methylation (DNAme) heterogeneity empowers evolution. Here, to comprehensively study the epigenetic dimension of cancer evolution, we integrate DNAme analysis with histone modification mapping and single cell analyses of RNA expression and DNAme in 22 primary CLL and 13 healthy donor B lymphocyte samples. Our data reveal corrupted coherence across different layers of the CLL epigenome. This manifests in decreased mutual information across epigenetic modifications and gene expression attributed to cell-to-cell heterogeneity. Disrupted epigenetic-transcriptional coordination in CLL is also reflected in the dysregulation of the transcriptional output as a function of the combinatorial chromatin states, including incomplete Polycomb-mediated gene silencing. Notably, we observe unexpected co-mapping of typically mutually exclusive activating and repressing histone modifications, suggestive of intra-tumoral epigenetic diversity. Thus, CLL epigenetic diversification leads to decreased coordination across layers of epigenetic information, likely reflecting an admixture of cells with diverging cellular identities.

Suggested Citation

  • Alessandro Pastore & Federico Gaiti & Sydney X. Lu & Ryan M. Brand & Scott Kulm & Ronan Chaligne & Hongcang Gu & Kevin Y. Huang & Elena K. Stamenova & Wendy Béguelin & Yanwen Jiang & Rafael C. Schulma, 2019. "Corrupted coordination of epigenetic modifications leads to diverging chromatin states and transcriptional heterogeneity in CLL," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-11, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-09645-5
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-09645-5
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    Cited by:

    1. Caglar Berkel & Ercan Cacan, 2019. "Single-Cell Epigenomics In Cancer Research," Biomedical Journal of Scientific & Technical Research, Biomedical Research Network+, LLC, vol. 21(3), pages 15966-15973, September.

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